Virama
diacritic in Brahmic abugidas noting the suppression of an inherent vowel pronounced after a base consonant letter in absence of any vowel sign; it may be not marked when it notes the composition of consonant conjuncts From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Virama (in Devanagari: ्) is a special symbol used in many Indian scripts. Normally, each consonant has a built-in "a" sound. For example, the letter क is read as "ka".[1]
In writing systems like Devanagari, Bengali, Tamil, and others, the virama is also essential for forming consonant clusters or ligatures. For instance, in the Hindi word "स्कूल" (school), the "स्" is formed by applying a virama to "स" so it can combine with "क".[2]
In digital writing, the virama has its own special code in Unicode. When it's used after a consonant, it tells the computer not to show the usual "a" sound. It can also make two or more consonants join together into one shape, called a ligature, depending on the script and the font. So, the virama is important both in traditional writing and in how Indian languages are shown on computers and phones today.
- halanta, hasanta or explicit virāma, a diacritic in many Brahmic scripts, including the Devanagari and Bengali scripts, or
- saṃyuktākṣara (Sanskrit: संयुक्ताक्षर) or implicit virama, a conjunct consonant or ligature.
Unicode schemes of scripts writing Mainland Southeast Asia languages, such as that of Burmese script and of Tibetan script, generally do not group the two functions together.
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References
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